58,219 research outputs found
Identity, environment and mental wellbeing in the veterinary profession
Mental health and career dissatisfaction are of increasing concern to the veterinary profession. The influence of identity on the psychological wellbeing of veterinarians has not been widely explored. Twelve recent veterinary graduates were enrolled in a private social media discussion group, and their identities investigated through narrative inquiry: a methodology which enables identity priorities to be extrapolated from stories of experience. Two distinct variants of the veterinary identity were identified: an academic, ‘diagnosis-focused’ identity, which prioritised definitive diagnosis and best-evidence treatment; and a broader ‘challenge-focused’ identity, where priorities additionally included engaging with the client, challenging environment or veterinary business. Contextual challenges (such as a client with limited finances or difficult interpersonal interactions) were seen as a source of frustration for those with a diagnosis-focused identity, as they obstructed the realisation of identity goals. Overcoming these challenges provided satisfaction to those with a challenge-focused identity. The employment environment of the graduates (general veterinary practice) provided more opportunities for those with a challenge-focused identity to realise identity goals, and more markers of emotional wellbeing were apparent in their stories. Markers of poor emotional health were evident in the stories of those with a diagnosis-focused identity
Can the nuclear symmetry potential at supra-saturation densities be negative?
In the framework of an Isospin-dependent Boltzmann-Uehling-Uhlenbeck (IBUU)
transport model, for the central Au+Au reaction at an incident
beam energy of 400 MeV/nucleon, effect of nuclear symmetry potential at
supra-saturation densities on the pre-equilibrium clusters emission is studied.
It is found that for the positive symmetry potential at supra-saturation
densities the neutron to proton ratio of lighter clusters with mass number
() is larger than that of the weighter clusters with
mass number (), whereas for the negative symmetry potential
at supra-saturation densities the is \emph{smaller} than that
of the . This may be considered as a probe of the negative
symmetry potential at supra-saturation densities.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, 1 table, to be publishe
Quantum pumping in graphene nanoribbons at resonant transmission
Adiabatic quantum charge pumping in graphene nanoribbon double barrier
structures with armchair and zigzag edges in the resonant transmission regime
is analyzed. Using recursive Green's function method we numerically calculate
the pumped charge for pumping contours encircling a resonance. We find that for
armchair ribbons the whole resonance line contributes to the pumping of a
single electron (ignoring double spin degeneracy) per cycle through the device.
The case of zigzag ribbons is more interesting due to zero-conductance
resonances. These resonances separate the whole resonance line into several
parts, each of which corresponds to the pumping of a single electron through
the device. Moreover, in contrast to armchair ribbons, one electron can be
pumped from the left lead to the right one or backwards. The current direction
depends on the particular part of the resonance line encircled by the pumping
contour.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures. This is an author-created, un-copyedited version
of an article accepted for publication in EPL. IOP Publishing Ltd is not
responsible for any errors or omissions in this version of the manuscript or
any version derived from it. The definitive publisher authenticated version
is available online at 10.1209/0295-5075/92/4701
A mini-array for large air showers
A mini-array that utilizes the Linsley effect is proposed for the measurement of large air showers. An estimate of the detectable shower rates for various shower sizes is made. Details of the detection and data collection systems are also described
Energetic Components of Cooperative Protein Folding
A new lattice protein model with a four-helix bundle ground state is analyzed
by a parameter-space Monte Carlo histogram technique to evaluate the effects of
an extensive variety of model potentials on folding thermodynamics. Cooperative
helical formation and contact energies based on a 5-letter alphabet are found
to be insufficient to satisfy calorimetric and other experimental criteria for
two-state folding. Such proteinlike behaviors are predicted, however, by models
with polypeptide-like local conformational restrictions and
environment-dependent hydrogen bonding-like interactions.Comment: 11 pages, 4 postscripts figures, Phys. Rev. Lett. (in press
Effects of Electromagnetic Field on the Dynamical Instability of Cylindrical Collapse
The objective of this paper is to discuss the dynamical instability in the
context of Newtonian and post Newtonian regimes. For this purpose, we consider
non-viscous heat conducting charged isotropic fluid as a collapsing matter with
cylindrical symmetry. Darmois junction conditions are formulated. The
perturbation scheme is applied to investigate the influence of dissipation and
electromagnetic field on the dynamical instability. We conclude that the
adiabatic index has smaller value for such a fluid in cylindrically
symmetric than isotropic sphere
Studies related to primitive chemistry. A proton and nitrogen-14 nuclear magnetic resonance amino acid and nucleic acid constituents and a and their possible relation to prebiotic
Preliminary proton nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) studies were made to determine the applicability of this technique for the study of interactions between monomeric and polymeric amino acids with monomeric nucleic acid bases and nucleotides. Proton NMR results for aqueous solutions (D2O) demonstrated interactions between the bases cytosine and adenine and acidic and aromatic amino acids. Solutions of 5'-AMP admixed with amino acids exhibited more complex behavior but stacking between aromatic rings and destacking at high amino acids concentration was evident. The multisite nature of 5'-AMP was pointed out. Chemical shift changes for adenine and 5'-AMP with three water soluble polypeptides demonstrated that significant interactions exist. It was found that the linewidth-pH profile of each amino acid is unique. It is concluded that NMR techniques can give significant and quantitative data on the association of amino acid and nucleic acid constituents
Scalar Wave Falloff in Asymptotically Anti-de Sitter Backgrounds
Conformally invariant scalar waves in black hole spacetimes which are
asymptotically anti-de Sitter are investigated. We consider both the
-dimensional black hole and -dimensional Schwarzschild-anti-de
Sitter spacetime as backgrounds. Analytical and numerical methods show that the
waves decay exponentially in the dimensional black hole background.
However the falloff pattern of the conformal scalar waves in the
Schwarzschild-anti-de Sitter background is generally neither exponential nor an
inverse power rate, although the approximate falloff of the maximal peak is
weakly exponential. We discuss the implications of these results for mass
inflation.Comment: 34 pages, Latex, 26 figures, uses psfi
Quadratic operators used in deducing exact ground states for correlated systems: ferromagnetism at half filling provided by a dispersive band
Quadratic operators are used in transforming the model Hamiltonian (H) of one
correlated and dispersive band in an unique positive semidefinite form coopting
both the kinetic and interacting part of H. The expression is used in deducing
exact ground states which are minimum energy eigenstates only of the full
Hamiltonian. It is shown in this frame that at half filling, also dispersive
bands can provide ferromagnetism in exact terms by correlation effects .Comment: 7 page
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